Mesobot can sneak up on marine life Evan Kovacs/Marine Imaging Technologies
A stealthy autonomous underwater robot that can track elusive underwater creatures without disturbing them could help us better understand the largest daily migration of life on Earth.
Mesobot, a 250-kilogram robot that operates either unconnected to a power source or tethered with a lightweight fibre-optic cable, is able to move around below the surface unobtrusively.
The ocean鈥檚 twilight zone 鈥 known more formally as the mesopelagic zone 鈥 lies between about 200 metres and 1 kilometre in depth. It is the site of the , a daily phenomenon during which deep-dwelling animals come closer to the surface to feed on the more plentiful food supplies found there, while dodging predators.
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The DVM is seen by biologists as a very important way in which nutrients 鈥 and carbon dioxide captured via photosynthesis 鈥 can be rapidly transported to depth, where carbon can be stored for the long term. But studying the creatures involved in the DVM is tricky, because they often flee from anything that disturbs the water, or from light.
鈥淎ll of the mechanisms that we think would frighten the animals, we looked to minimise,鈥 says at Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution in Massachusetts, who developed Mesobot 鈥 which uses low-powered thrusters 鈥 with his colleagues. 鈥淲e made something that doesn’t disturb the water, doesn鈥檛 have bright lights, and doesn’t make a lot of noise.鈥
Using its attached red-light camera, Mesobot is able to get close enough to sea creatures without disturbing them, and can then monitor their movements over a prolonged period of time. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to understand the daily life of these animals,鈥 says Yoerger.
In California鈥檚 Monterey Bay, Mesobot was able to dive to a depth of 200 metres and film as well as giant larvaceans, which are filter feeders that look like a translucent pair of lungs. The robot tracked the jellyfish for 4 minutes, and a larvacean for upwards of 40 minutes, before it had to return to port. Based on power usage in these live missions, the team thinks Mesobot can track for a day without issues.
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鈥淭his is super exciting, from both an application and a robotics perspective,鈥 says at the University of Oxford. 鈥淯nderstanding our oceans will play a key role in our future sustainability goals. Their vastness and inhospitablity to humans means that our only solutions for large-scale, systematic investigations will have to involve robots in some way.鈥
Yoerger hopes to deploy Mesobot for longer missions that will provide us with more information on the activity in the twilight zone.
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